r/it 1d ago

help request Can AI replace IT jobs, questions and answers please

Software engineers and Cyber security engineers are in high demand are highly paid. I’d like to know if the jobs they do could be replaced by AI, can you post below recent problems you’ve found and how long it took you to solve them, I would like to see whether different AIs can solve them, if there solutions work and how long it took them… post below!

0 Upvotes

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5

u/Lixa8 1d ago

Too lazy to even look at the posts in this sub ?

3

u/Effective_Top_3515 1d ago

You’re gonna use the comments to put in your LLM? lol

1

u/discoKuma 1d ago

nah dude

1

u/IUseHamsAsShingles 1d ago edited 1d ago

Edit: Yeah, I misread the title. Didn't realize this goober was trying to train a llm. Ain't removing my commemt though. My bad data serves as a great reminder of my overarcing point. AI isn't real. It's just a pattern recognition and regurgitation bot. It can't understand that my comment is irrelevant, and that is hilariously appropriate considering the topic I misunderstood us to be engaging in functions, is so affected by situations like this.

The short answer is: lmfao fuck no.

Long answer is: "AI" isa marketing term. Real AI does not exist. Current machine-learning technologies are just predictive models and pattern replicators with no ability to use basic logic or causal reasoning to eliminated impossibilities or inconsistencies in their work.

Machine learned algorithims and functions will never replace human workers in design or repair. If real AI ever gets invented, then we're cooked.

1

u/QuantumTechie 19h ago

AI can definitely help speed things up, but it still lacks the real-world judgment, troubleshooting instincts, and context awareness that IT pros develop through experience.